Canada reviewing NBA plan to play in Toronto
The Canadian government is reviewing a proposal from the National Basketball Association and the Raptors to play in Toronto amid the pandemic.
A spokesperson for Health Minister Patty Hajdu says officials have been in contact with the Raptors and will continue to engage with them “in the coming weeks.”
Raptors general manager Bobby Webster told Sportsnet television the team needs to know “in the coming days. This is not a next week type thing.”
The Raptors and the NBA need an exemption to a requirement that anyone entering Canada for nonessential reasons must self-isolate for 14 days. The U.s.-canada border remains closed to nonessential travel.
The federal government denied Major League Baseball’s Blue Jays’ request to play in Toronto earlier this year because health officials didn’t think it was safe for players to travel back and forth from the U.S., one of the countries hit hardest by the coronavirus pandemic. The number of cases in both countries has surged since then.
“The health and safety of Canadians is our government’s top priority and reducing the spread of COVID-19 must always be top of mind,” Hajdu’s office said in statement. “We understand that many Canadians are eager to see their favourite professional teams return to play. We are reviewing a proposal from the NBA and the Toronto Raptors for the resumption of NBA basketball in Canada.”
The NBA season is set to open Dec. 22, with training camps beginning in about two weeks. Time is running out for the Raptors.
“We are working on, as everyone knows, a kind of parallel path here, which is we want to stay in Toronto but as we all know time is of the essence and we are also working on a path to play elsewhere,” Webster said.
“We want to be in Toronto. We want to play here. But we are also realistic about the timing and respectful of the protocols. ... It doesn’t necessarily affect our operations. We all know we’ll run a basketball team and the 72 games will get played.”
Dr. Andrew Morris, a professor of infectious diseases at the University of Toronto and the medical director of the Antimicrobial Stewardship Program at Sinai-university Health Network, doesn’t think the Raptors should be allowed to play in Canada. Nor does he expect the government to approve it.
“I anticipate the Raptors will have to play south of the border,” Morris said. “The logistics, the optics, make no sense.”